The All-in-One Commerce Platform for Businesses - Shopify
Shopify offers plans for anyone that wants to sell products online and build an ecommerce store, small to mid-sized businesses as well as enterprise
Shopify is a leading all-in-one commerce platform that enables businesses to start, build, and grow their online and physical stores. It offers tools to create customized websites, manage inventory, process payments, and sell across multiple channels including online, in-person, wholesale, and global markets. The platform includes integrated marketing tools, analytics, and customer engagement features to help merchants reach and retain customers. Shopify supports thousands of third-party apps and offers developer-friendly APIs for custom solutions. With world-class checkout technology, Shopify powers over 150 million high-intent shoppers worldwide. Its reliable, scalable infrastructure ensures fast performance and seamless operations at any business size.
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Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas
Build gen AI apps with an all-in-one modern database: MongoDB Atlas
MongoDB Atlas provides built-in vector search and a flexible document model so developers can build, scale, and run gen AI apps without stitching together multiple databases. From LLM integration to semantic search, Atlas simplifies your AI architecture—and it’s free to get started.
sparklyr is an R package that provides seamless interfacing with Apache Spark clusters—either local or remote—while letting users write code in familiar R paradigms. It supplies a dplyr-compatible backend, Spark machine learning pipelines, SQL integration, and I/O utilities to manipulate and analyze large datasets distributed across cluster environments.
A benchmark of commonly used open source implementations
... implementations. The benchmarks cover algorithms like logistic regression, random forest, gradient boosting, and deep neural networks, and they compare across toolkits such as scikit-learn, R packages, xgboost, H2O, Spark MLlib, etc. The repository is structured in logical folders, each corresponding to algorithm categories.